The Germany play-maker, who scored and turned in a fantastic shift for the Gunners against Everton at the weekend, had to come off at half-time during the clash with Bayern. It was initially thought that the substitution was tactical, with Tomas Rosicky coming on, but it later emerged that Ozil has picked up a knock.

Arsenal midfielder Mesut Ozil is facing “at least a few weeks” out after injuring his hamstring in Tuesday’s Champions League exit at Bayern Munich.
The 25-year-old was withdrawn at half-time in Arsenal’s 1-1 draw in Munich, which saw them lose 3-1 on aggregate.

Says Wenger:

“We have to make a scan to see how bad it is but he’s out for a few weeks. We hope it’s not so bad.”

The final humiliation for Mesut Ozil came at half-time. The German midfielder was ­substituted, his misery compounded in the Allianz Arena, and we are left wondering where Arsenal’s record £42million signing has gone.

He was humiliated because he hurt his leg. Wow, indeed. Are all players humiliated by an injury? Do we demand that they be superhuman?

Neil Ashton added in the Daily Mail:

At £42.5m Mesut Ozil is the most expensive export in the history of German football. After his performance in Munich you wouldn’t pay two-bob for him.

So. Not a devastating blow to Arsenal, then.

There should be something special about returning to the country where it all started for the Arsenal midfielder. Behind those eyes something is going on with Ozil because he is simply not right – and not just because of the hamstring problem that will keep him out until April.

That’s Ozil who was Man of the Match in his last full game for the Gunners.

Jim White in the Daily Telegraph had more:

Arsenal had turned up in Germany apparently attempting to field an ineligible player in this Champions League tie. After half an hour, we knew the player’s identity: it was Ozil, making himself entirely ineligible from consideration as a man for the big occasion. The German’s season has traced the trajectory of a rollercoaster. Up, up, up, then down, down, down it has gone. On Tuesday night it reached the point when the car arrives at the end of the ride and all the passengers get out, underwhelmed.

What about taking time to bed into a new team in a new country?

My, he was poor. This was the sort of game he was bought for, to deliver a difference. Yet almost from the moment the Bayern fans rose to their feet to issue a collective chant Ozil was indifference personified. Stationed out on the right of a midfield four, his first contribution gave a clue as to how he would proceed. He deftly brought down a lofted pass, then dribbled unchallenged into touch. And that was his high point.